Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Yita, The Street of Plain Happyness, China, 2023

front cover

I'm going to let the artist explain what's happening here:

"For me, the Street of Plain Happiness is the traditional morning market in Northeast China.

When I was a child, I felt like I could find everything here -lots of delicious
food and lots of joy. The people running street vendors are resilient and
interesting. In the winter, with temperatures dropping to minus twenty or
thirty degrees Celsius, the morning market has hardly ever stopped for
decades.

I used an Olympus-PenF half-frame film camera to take these photos in
September 2019. In three years that followed, after many closures and
lockdowns because of COVID-19, the warmth and vibrancy faded away.
The 'street' came back after the pandemic. After surviving, I hope that
people can live peacefully in an unknown place.

The backside of the book is adorned with traditional "spring couplets'
written in calligraphy on a red background, depicting the most
representative street scene of the morning market and reflecting the
essence of urban culture. Unfolding the book on the table, the three-
dimensional street model can be formed by standing the folded paper on
both sides, presenting another perspective to tell the story of the morning
market. Folding and unfolding it, you can feel the atmosphere of the Street
of Plain Happiness, as if strolling through it."

Yita's use of this particular type of folded map has an interesting history within artists' books. This technique of depicting a street and its businesses was used most notably by Ed Ruscha in his artists' book Every Building on the Sunset Strip (1966), but there was one predecessor in a publication titled Ginza Haccho (1954) by the Japanese writer and artist Shohachi Kimura with photographs by Yoshikazu Suzuki. Its interesting to me that Yita does not address this history.

30 double-sided pages, individually 4.75" x 3.25" and when unfolded 8' 1.5"





reverse side




back cover
 

Karen M. Wirth, Cocoon, 2023

front cover

A really interesting accordion that presents a series of photographs of rocks cocooned in a glacier in the northernmost part of Norway. Accompanying the images of rocks are a series of texts with definitions of 'cocoon.' About this piece the artists states in an endnote:

"The cocooned rocks were photographed on Spitsbergen, the largest island in the archipelago of Svalbard, Norway, between 76º46'21.13"N and 79º19'30.56"N latitudes, between June 10 and June 21, 2023. The last image is in the area of the Mayersbreen glacier."

For more about Wirth's works see: Karen M. Wirth

14 double-sided pages, individually 2.75" x 4" and when unfolded 4' 8".






reverse side with snow landscape


Erin K. Schmidt, Rust Belt, 2023, ed. 20

front cover with clasp

A small accordion that uses the 2-sided folded features of the leporello to deliver an environmental message. Below is a statement by the Schmidt about this publication:

"The Rust Belt, formerly called Steel Belt, is a region of the Northeast and Midwest United States in which the local economies specialized in large scale manufacturing of heavy industrial and consumer products. At one time considered America’s heartland, the Rust Belt began to experience industrial decline in the 1950’s and has continued to since. The elimination and outsourcing of jobs led to economic distress resulting in population decline as workers began to look elsewhere for good paying jobs.

The photos used on the front of the accordion structure as well as the cover were taken south of Detroit, Michigan along highway I-75. They are some of the remains of an era of manufacturing prosperity. The backside of the accordion structure features a photograph of the new Jeep plant in Toledo, Ohio, which continues to thrive today.
Pressed tin ornamentation became a popular and affordable element of American architecture from the 1880s to 1930s during the height of the Steel Belt manufacturing boom, and was commonly used on ceilings. The decorative book closure is reminiscent of the those pressed tin ceiling tiles commonly found in the homes of American workers who could once earn a substantial wage - enough to comfortably raise a family on a single income - at one of the many industrial plants or factories. The book closure is representative of a bygone era."

For more info about Schmidt's bookworks see: Erin K. Schmidt

13 double-sided pages, individually 4.5" x 1", and when unfolded 17"( including covers).

front

back

the two sideways views


back cover


Laura Rowley, Gig Life: Issue 1: History, Illuminated Press, Trumanburg, New York, 2021, ed. 100

front cover

A smart and timely zine that showcases a timeline of the gig economy and all the ramification that this exploitive system has for the workers toiling within it. Here's what Printed Matter (NY) says about this accordion: 

"Gig Life is a serial zine which investigates the Gig Economy: the shift to hiring of temporary workers, often part-time and lacking the benefits of a traditional salaried job.

How did the Gig Economy start and how does it affect workers? This zine series aims to answer these questions and others. We start here, in this first issue, with a timeline history of Gig Work, to visualize the events leading us to our present state."


17 single-sided pages, individually 4" x 2.5", when unfolded 3' 8.25"






back cover